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Chengdu (China)Submitted by RUAF China on Fri, 11/19/2010 - 11:31
Date of RUAF intervention: 2005-2008 Introduction | Urban agriculture in Chengdu | Multistakeholder Policy formulation and Action Planning | Contact Chengdu is the capital of Sichuan province in southwest China, located at E102°54′-31°26′, N30°5′-31°26′. Of the total population of Chengdu city (11.03 million in 2006), 5.3 million of the people live in rural areas. The total land area is 12132km2. Chengdu consist of 9 districts (Jinjiang, Qingyang, Jinniu, Wuhou, Chenghua, Longquanyi, and Wenjiang), 4 county-level cities (Dujiangyan, Pengzhou, Qionglai, and Chongzhou), and 6 counties (Jintang, Shuangliu, Pi, Dayi, Pujiang, and Xinjin). Among these, Wenjiang, Dujiangyan and Pixian are pilot districts (in green) of RUAF China. TYPES OF URBAN AGRICULTURE IN CHENGDU Urban agriculture in Chengdu is known for its diversity in high-quality products. because of its favourable climate for agriculture. Chengdu is one of the pioneering cities in China in the development of agro- tourism. Agro-tourism is locally known as Nongjiale; where tourists from urban areas in Chengdu go to a farmers’ house and stay over the weekend, eating country food and enjoy the nature. Nongjiale provides opportunities for urban tourists to enjoy nature, but it has also significantly increased local rural households’ annual income, thereby improving the overall quality of Chengdu’s rural environment. Some farmers combine this with selling flowers. Nongjiale accommodated some 15 million tourists every year to date (2005), created more than 290,000 jobs. Meanwhile, urban agriculture in Chengdu is growing and has now become an integral part of the city’s economy.
Chengdu Municipality supports their development. It has accomplished land reform, constructed various industrial agriculture parks, and assisted farmer cooperatives, thus facilitating a new economic model adapted to the city. Industrial agriculture parks operate under a "government-launched / market-run" principle: the city government creates a sound infrastructure adter which numerous leading enterprises invest in the park, thereby setting the stage for efficient intensive agricultural production and parallel growth of foreign and local businesses. Examples include the Szechuan Floriculture Park in Pi County, Dujiangyan Kiwi Park, etc. In the process of urban-rural integration and agricultural industrialisation, the formation of urban-rural cooperatives throughout Chengdu is apparent. Rural government bodies first assist local farmers developing partnerships on collective land and capital and then operate either independently or with outside investors. Examples include the Tongchun Floricultural Cooperative, etc. Chengdu’s agricultural cooperatives are industry-specific and are composed of local farmers, companies, and organizations who bring together key elements of production, processing, transportation, distribution, capital transaction, information exchange, etc. to provide a series of services throughout the entire production process. Examples include the Dujiangyan Risheng Kiwi Cooperative and the Jianghe Fishery Cooperative. MULTISTAKEHOLDER POLICYMAKING AND ACTION PLANNING ON URBAN AGRICULTURE (MPAP) Since 2005, several meetings have been organised in Chengdu by RUAF China and the local Chengdu team. In November 2006, the RUAF China Regional Centre and the Sichuan Provincial Party Committee’s Research Office organised the MPAP training workshop and discussion forum on international urban agriculture in Chengdu. Participants discussed the MPAP process and the various aspects such as the exploratory study, multi-stakeholder analysis, PRA, policy design, agriculture technology demonstration, pilot projects selection and action planning. The training established a basis for the unfolding of pilot projects in Chengdu and mobilised commitment of the participants.
Development strategies Subsequent steps in the MPAP process in Chengdu have been:
Pilot projects The following pilot projects have been undertaken: 1. Development of Chengdu agro-tourism 2. Supporting Dujiangyan Jianghe Aquaculture
3. Organic agriculture development RUAF China supported the development of organic agriculture, and other facilitating activities, such as training in organic growing and financial support for farmers during the period in which their land is making the transition from conventional to organic agriculture. 4. Development of a village-based cooperative RUAF China provided this cooperative with market information; and introduced their model to others. It also lobbied with the government to support this kind of cooperative. For more information on the RUAF-Cities Farming for the Future Programme in the region, contact the regional coordinator at RUAF China or see their website. Click here to return to the worldmap ( categories: )
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